This morning was filled with excitement in the air.   Breakfast was  "charged".   Everyone was excited and some were nervous.  The weather  was typical for  the Oregon coast---overcast, chilly, some drizzle.    Everyone got used  to the morning routine of loading their gear onto the  support vans,  signing in (they have to sign in at every sag stop, too,  so they can be  kept track of), and then riders began to leave.   There was no group start  or official  start, so people just started peeling off.   I said good-bye to  Terry and the group and that I'd see them all on the other side. Terry joined  up with his  roommate Mike and some others he rode a warm-up with  yesterday, and was  on the road by 7:30 a.m.  Terry reported that they had the wind in their  face for quite a while,  but the weather improved as the ride went on.   Most of the ride was  along the Columbia River.   Unfortunately, cloud  cover prevented many  views of Mt. St. Helens but occasionally they were  rewarded with  gorgeous views of it. The day was  marred by a crash, which ended the tour for one of  the riders.   On the  way to second sag stop on a steep descent, he hit a  pothole, crashed and  broke his collarbone.  The poor guy, after all  that training.  But, he  said he's determined to do it next year.   They finished up in St.  Helens, Oregon, on  the Columbia River.  They're  starting to anticipate  the first long day and difficult climb, which  happens on Friday.  They  follow the Columbia River for a number of  days, as you can see in the  enlarged map, day 1-4.     
As the riders get to know each other (and many also maintain blogs), here's what Travis had to say about Terry on his blog:  "Today, I’d like to introduce Tucson Terry.  At 74, Terry is the oldest  person on this ride.  Originally from London, then from New Jersey,  Terry finally saw the light a few years ago and moved to the southwest.   If I had only three words to describe Terry, I’d say: dog-toy tough.   Terry is perhaps the skinniest human being ever built.  He looks like a  pile of tooth picks loosely joined with bubblegum. But he’s a hard  rider.  I’m a pretty good hill climber — not in Loco’s league — but not  bad.  So what does Terry do on the first big hill we hit?  He drops me.   I’m thinking: he’s older than I am, he’s skinnier than I am, he’s got a  funny accent and yet he dropped me like a bad habit.  Hmmm … maybe it’s  the bike".
Hilarious!!!
|  | 
| ABB Support Vans | 
|  | 
| Loading Gear | 
 | 
|  | 
| Riders Ready | 
 | 
|  | 
| Terry's On His Way | 
 | 
 
Happy to hear the news. Happy trails back to Tucson. From San Francisco, David.
ReplyDeleteWe were just talking about you and wondered when Terry was starting his historic bike ride. Thank you so much for the marvelous briefing. We'd love to be updated on his journey! The map is terrific and really shows just how huge a ride this is. GO TERRY!!! Love, Susan & Shawn
ReplyDeletethanks for the update! Geoff
ReplyDeleteUNBELIEVABLE!!!! I am in total awe of Terry. I always have been, but seeing this route on the map really puts it into perspective. How long is the ride from Day 4-5? It looks loooong on the map. What an incredible adventure. How do they get across the Great Lakes? Are there bridges??? I'm speechless. Wow, if you talk with Terry, tell him that Paul, Sara and I are cheering him along the whole way!!!! WOW.WOW.WOW. XXOO, Carey
ReplyDeleteYou'll have to take these updates and do a book at the conclusion. You're a good writer and I'm sure the trip will be filled with fun facts and interesting adventures. Keep them coming! Pam E.
ReplyDeleteLove reading the travelogue. Keep them coming. Dana & Ira.
ReplyDeleteHi Lois! Thank you for keeping me in the loop about Terry's marathon adventure. Please give Terry my love & best wishes, and apart from thinking that perhaps is a little mad, I have nothing but tremendous admiration for him, in doing these challenging trips. Love to you, too, Lois. Barbara
ReplyDeleteThanks for relaying and keeping us informed about Terry's trip. I look forward to reading about all of his adventures, and if you are as detailed in future updates as this one, I am looking forward to an interesting read. However, Terry having a "short" trip of 80 miles does make my every-other-day bike ride of 15-20 miles seem awfully wimpy.... Bernie
ReplyDeleteVery interesting! The maps are great. It really helped me visualize the enormity of what Terry is doing. Looking forward to hearing more. Give Terry our love. Cookie
ReplyDelete